MIFTAH
Friday, 19 April. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

US President Barack Obama has just concluded a historic visit to Israel — his first to that country as president. Given his administration’s efforts to downplay any expectations of a breakthrough, the visit did not disappoint: No breakthrough was achieved.

The task of trying to restart stalled peace negotiations — and the risk of failure that goes with it — now falls to US Secretary of State John Kerry.

But the visit, described by the New York Times as full of symbolism, was not without substantive interest. Obama spent most of his time in Israel and devoted most of his speeches there to repeated reassurances that the US will always be Israel’s most important ally, that these bonds are unbreakable, and that America will always stand by Israel and defend it against all enemies and against all threats — be it Hamas rockets, Iran’s nuclear weapons, Hezbollah, or Syria’s chemical weapons.

Obama also reassured his Israeli audiences that he understood their reluctance to take risks for peace. He appropriated the Israeli argument that Israel took a risk when it withdrew from Lebanon and Gaza only to be rewarded with violence by Hezbollah and Hamas. But he rejected the use of this argument as an excuse for not engaging in peace negotiations.

Indirectly rejecting the Israeli argument that Israel has no Palestinian partner for peace, Obama emphatically asserted: “You do have a true partner” in Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and in Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad.

Obama said that peace was necessary, just and possible and that peace was “the only way to truly protect the Israeli people” because “no wall is high enough, and no Iron Dome is strong enough, to stop every enemy from inflicting harm”.

Obama called on the Palestinians to recognise that the Israelis have the right to insist on security guarantees while telling Israeli leaders to recognise that colony construction is “counterproductive to the cause of peace” and that “an independent Palestine must be viable …”

Had Obama confined himself to these remarks, there would have been nothing remarkable about the visit other than polite generalities repeated indefatigably and proven ineffective. But Obama went beyond generalities in his speech to a group of Israeli university students at the international convention centre in occupied Jerusalem. There, he mounted the most impassioned public defence of the Palestinian people’s right to freedom and self-determination.

Appealing directly to the young Israelis, Obama said they could be the generation that secured the Zionist dream or the one that faced growing challenges to it. He asserted that a viable independent Palestinian state is the only guarantee of an enduring Jewish and democratic state. He urged his young audience to make their voices louder than those who reject peace, and work towards creating the future they want their children to have.

In the most unprecedented public condemnation of the Israeli occupation ever made by an American president before an Israeli audience, Obama said, “The Palestinian people’s right to self-determination and justice must also be recognised ...

“It is not fair that a Palestinian child cannot grow up in a state of her own ... It is not just when settler [colonist] violence against Palestinians goes unpunished. It is not right to … displace Palestinian families from their homes. Neither occupation nor expulsion is the answer … Palestinians have a right to be a free people in their own land.”

Remarkably, the Israeli audience erupted in applause, suggesting that a gulf separates Israeli leaders — generally supportive of the status quo — and the Israeli public, largely opposed to occupation, and anxious to see an end to the conflict and justice for the Palestinians.

Equally remarkable is the degree to which the Palestinian leadership is anxious to resume the stalled negotiations lest they continue to lose credibility with their own people.

The New York Times obtained a secret Palestinian document containing talking points prepared for Abbas for his meeting with Obama. The document reportedly shows Abbas offering Obama concessions to help him persuade Benjamin Netanyahu to freeze colony construction and resume peace talks.

Abbas reportedly offered to accept a secret freeze on colony construction. This, in addition to a promise not to use the recent recognition by the United Nations of Palestinian status as a non-member state to bring Israel to the Permanent Criminal Court for Human Rights violations.

It is not clear what Obama did with these offers assuming Abbas did make them.

What is clear, however, is that Obama did give up on trying to directly pressure Netanyahu into making peace with the Palestinians. He has decided to appeal to the Israeli people directly, especially the young, suggesting that change will be long in coming.

To succeed, Obama relied on the power of impassioned appeals, beautiful rhetoric, elegant arguments, and the basic justice of the Palestinian cause. In so doing, Obama made entrenched ideologues like Netanyahu look like a political dinosaur — for a brief moment at least. But will that be enough to bring peace to Israelis and Palestinians?

 
 
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